National Day of Prayer
Excerpt from A Time for Prayer, the 2010 book for the National Day of Prayer:
Taking Back Our Communities by Lance Wubbels
One of the greatest “layperson revivals” in American history occurred in 1857. At that time there were 30,000 men idle on the streets of New York. Drunkenness was rampant, and the nation was divided by slavery. On September 23, 1857, Jeremiah Lanphier, a praying businessman, began a noontime prayer meeting on Fulton Street in the Financial District of Manhattan. Out of a city of one million people, six people showed up. However, the crowds grew, and within three months there were prayer meetings all over the city. More than 50,000 people in New York City alone paused each Wednesday at noon to pray. The prayer revival soon spread across the nation, and in about 18 months, a million people were converted to Jesus Christ.
Ongoing since 2002, prayer warriors rallied against a prolific drug problem in Manchester, Kentucky. Located in Clay County, the second poorest county in Kentucky and the sixth poorest in the nation, Manchester had approximately the same number in the county jail and federal prison as residents – 2,200. As reported on the 700 Club, almost immediately they began to see change. Drug arrests went way up! Drug dealers and users started coming to church and getting saved and the story of Manchester was carried in papers through the country. Little did they know their march against drugs would ignite a fire of hope that continues to spread across the country. Dozens of towns, from Georgia to Texas, after seeing the stories on the 700 Club, held their own marches and are taking back their communities for Christ.
Prayer for the Nation by Max Lucado
Dear God,
Not to us, O Lord, but to You goes all the glory.
We depend on You. You give birth and breath and determine our days. You make every nation and set every boundary. We exist by Your power.
We exist for Your glory. Showcase Your power through this land. Display Your justice in our courts, wisdom in our governments, guidance in our schools, and love in our homes.
Have mercy upon our sins. We have disrespected Your Word, disregarded Your gifts, and discarded Your children. We are sorry. Forgive us, dear Father.
Grant strength to all our leaders. May they serve You first and honor You most. Remind us of the brevity of this life and the beauty of the next. Prepare our souls for the day we meet You in eternity.
This we pray in Your holy name, Amen.
